State v. Woodward

74 P.2d 92, 58 Idaho 385, 114 A.L.R. 627, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 38
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1937
DocketNo. 6439.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 92 (State v. Woodward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Woodward, 74 P.2d 92, 58 Idaho 385, 114 A.L.R. 627, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 38 (Idaho 1937).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

About 5 o’clock in the afternoon of June 28, 1936, Evelyn Harmon arrived in Moscow from Lewiston. Appellant had previously made arrangements to take her from Moscow to Rockford, Washington, where her family resided. While the two were in a restaurant in Moscow Miss Harmon slipped out, took appellant’s car and was gone about an hour. When she returned she again went into the restaurant and appellant sat outside in the car and waited for her. About 7:30 P. M. Woodrow Spray, complaining witness in this case, and a nephew of appellant, drove up with his wife and a Mr. Hoke. In conversing with the three appellant showed anger because of Miss Harmon’s delay in getting started on the trip and threatened to throw her clothes out in the street. Spray advised him not to do that and went into the restaurant to speak to Miss Harmon, after which she came out and got into appellant’s car. Mrs. Spray testified that, while Spray was in the restaurant, appellant came over to their car and made some insulting remarks to her; appellant denied making any offensive remarks. Miss Harmon testified that Spray, on being informed of these remarks, had *388 come over to appellant’s car and cursed the appellant, “the worst cuss words you could ever think of.” In a teasing way she yelled out the window, as she and appellant were driving away, “come on to the edge of town and we will have it out.” The three occupants of the other car all testified to hearing this remark.

Appellant’s car started down the street and Spray’s car followed. In the meantime, Miss ITarmon, who testified she “didn’t want to get in no fight,” jumped out of the car. The two ears arrived at the intersection of two streets which form “deadends” near the edge of the city. There was a slight collision between them there, Spray’s ear bumping into the left back fender of appellant’s car. Appellant’s car stopped, parked on the right side of the street going south. Spray got out of his car and walked to the driver’s side of appellant’s ear and opened the door, saying: “if this is as far as you are going, George, come on and get out.”

Appellant’s testimony discloses that Spray ‘‘grabbed me by the shirt first with one hand, and then with the other he hit me about three licks .... After he [Spray] hit me the third time,” appellant said he reached over and got his gun. “When I reached for the gun he got me in the back of the head; here. I intended to hit him right over the head, and he knocked the gun right up .... I don’t know what happened from then on- — I heard the first shot and that’s all. I know.....I didn’t come to myself until we got down to the jail.” Spray denied hitting appellant before the shot was fired.

Appellant was 56 years old at the time of the trial and weighed 200 pounds. Spray was 24 years old and weighed 172 pounds.

The testimony disclosed that at the time of the affray appellant’s gun was discharged three or four times. Hoke testified he “got a finger shot off”; he testified to hearing “positively” three shots fired. A resident of the neighborhood where the altercation took place testified that after the first shot was fired Spray was “dodging around between the two cars.” She heard more than three shots fired. She also testified to moving Mrs. Spray over to the curb after the *389 latter had been shot in the leg. Young boys who resided near by also testified to the shooting'. Spray testified that after the shooting he didn’t know whether appellant started to drive off or whether the car rolled but it ran into a telephone pole about 50 feet from where the shooting occurred. It seems that appellant did not drive the car this latter distance.

Driskill, a police officer, testified to seeing appellant lying about the middle of the street downhill a little ways from the car which was then over the curb; that “he looked like he had been in a terrific battle ’ ’; that he found a gun in the bottom of appellant’s car. At the time he found it there five shots had been discharged and one had misfired. There was a hole shot through the top of the car, practically above the driver’s seat. Spray testified that he saw appellant take a gun out of the panel on the dash of his car just before backing out from in front of the restaurant.

Dr. Loehr’s testimony shows that he found severe traumatic conditions on the left side of appellant’s head; that his eye was black and there was a large area turning black back of his left ear; that the next morning it was almost impossible for appellant to get his mouth open; “appeared just like there had been a hard blow against the mastoid, or solid bone — no bad cuts, just bruises.....I think he was dazed. I think it is very possible that it was from a blow he had had.”

Mr. Lind, also resident of thé neighborhood of the shooting, testified to a bullet coming through the front door of his home which “just missed my forehead by about two inches.” Mrs. Lind testified to seeing two men; that she saw one “knock the other down in the road. He tromped on him and kicked him. I would say it was very severe.” When asked by the court whether he kicked or beat appellant, while he was lying on the ground, Spray answered: “I wouldn’t say I didn’t.” On repeating the question, the same answer was given by Spray.

The information charged appellant “with the crime of an Assault with a deadly weapon, .... a 38 special revolver, .... and that said assault was committed by the said de *390 fendant by firing said revolver at the person of Woodrow Spray with intent to produce great bodily injury.” A plea of “Not guilty” was entered. The case was tried to the court and a jury. A verdict of guilty was returned. Appellant was sentenced to an indeterminate term of from six months to two years in the state penitentiary. He has appealed from the judgment.

Several specifications of error have been assigned but we think the only ones that will require consideration are those urged against certain of the instructions given to the jury by the court. The defendant requested that the court give to the jury the following instruction:

“You are instructed that the defendant, under the Constitution of Idaho, was entitled to keep and bear firearms for his security and defense.”

The court gave this instruction and added thereto the following :

“The legislature, however, has the power to regulate the exercise of this right, and this you may consider in connection with the other instructions given you herewith.”

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 92, 58 Idaho 385, 114 A.L.R. 627, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-woodward-idaho-1937.